- Dell Laptop LCD Failure in WIndows
- Posted by xaviero@gmail.com on April 24th, 2006
The other days I left my laptop on for a couple hours (3-4) and when I
returned and moved the mouse so it would exit the "screen sleep" state
if flickered and the lcd screen was visible for a second or two then it
went very dim. (enough to see slight shadows but not enough to
distinguish what is on the screen).
The laptop still functions ok, because I connected it to an external
monitor and I can use it with out any issues.
Also, when booting up I can see the DELL startup screen, the LCD dims
when windows takes over.
With the external monitor I was able to go into the device manager, no
errors when shown.
Any suggestions?? Thanks!
- Posted by Bob I on April 24th, 2006
Sounds like backlight failure. That is a usually a vendor repair issue.
xaviero@gmail.com wrote:
- Posted by Dave on April 25th, 2006
"Bob I" <birelan@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:%23vVFHj%23ZGHA.4292@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
the inverter. Check lcdpart.com for parts.
Dave
- Posted by xfile on April 25th, 2006
Hi,
Just in case for breaking your warranty, I'd recommend you to contact Dell
support and/or check their forum before doing repair.
<xaviero@gmail.com>
???????:1145913800.989022.227650@e56g2000cwe.googl egroups.com...
- Posted by Kerry Brown on April 25th, 2006
I also think it's probably a backlight issue but just in case it's not:
Some laptops have an option to switch between the lcd screen and an external
screen. Usually you have to press a combination of keys or do something in
the display properties. On my Toshiba you press Fn+F5 to toggle between
either or both screens. The fact that you can see the Dell startup screen
means it may be a Windows problem. Is the Dell startup screen at normal
brightness?
--
Kerry
MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User
<xaviero@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1145913800.989022.227650@e56g2000cwe.googlegr oups.com...
- Posted by JANA on April 25th, 2006
The backlights and inverter are most likely failing. This can be serviced by
DELL.
--
JANA
_____
<xaviero@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1145913800.989022.227650@e56g2000cwe.googlegr oups.com...
The other days I left my laptop on for a couple hours (3-4) and when I
returned and moved the mouse so it would exit the "screen sleep" state
if flickered and the lcd screen was visible for a second or two then it
went very dim. (enough to see slight shadows but not enough to
distinguish what is on the screen).
The laptop still functions ok, because I connected it to an external
monitor and I can use it with out any issues.
Also, when booting up I can see the DELL startup screen, the LCD dims
when windows takes over.
With the external monitor I was able to go into the device manager, no
errors when shown.
Any suggestions?? Thanks!
- Posted by xaviero@gmail.com on April 25th, 2006
Thanks for your comments. I have another laptop, maybe a year old, that
has issues with the power cord connection so I try to swap out the
backlights, any warnings???
Thanks again.....
- Posted by Michael Kennedy on April 26th, 2006
Yeah.. Don't ruin your warrenty.. If it is less than a year old I'm sure
that it is still under warrenty. On top of that I bet that they don't have
the same or even similar inverter. I bet you could find someone to fix that
power cord issue fairly cheap or sell it on ebay for good money since there
are no major issues with it.
- Mike
- Posted by Gary on April 26th, 2006
If you can see the dell logo and boot info on the screen at boot up, the lcd
should be okay. you can try to boot off a floppy and see if the lcd stays
on for 10-15 minutes at the DOS prompt. If it does the lcd should be fine.
you can try deleting the monitor from the device manager in windows, it will
find the display again and reload the driver on the next boot. If it's a
driver issue, you'll need to totally remove the driver and reload it.
<xaviero@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1145913800.989022.227650@e56g2000cwe.googlegr oups.com...
- Posted by Kismet on April 26th, 2006
Hi There, Had a problem on a latitude lite that, it was the ribbon connector
from the display to the motherboard that needed reseaing, the strip at the
top of the keyboard flips off then remove a couple of screws to lift the
keyboard and get to the connector itself, just reseat it
hope that helps
"xaviero@gmail.com" wrote:
- Posted by Michael Kennedy on April 27th, 2006
If you are using windows XP
Try hitting F8 at bootup and select VGA mode or Safe mode.
If you can get a picture delete your graphics card driver from device
manager along with your display.
- Mike
"Gary" <garywilliamson@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:fNWdnfkke-kjRdLZRVn-tg@comcast.com...
- Posted by Lionel on April 30th, 2006
On Mon, 24 Apr 2006 21:00:17 -0700, "Kerry Brown"
<kerry@kdbNOSPAMsys-tems.c*a*m> opined:
On the same topic, laptops usually have a tiny switch (push button or
microswitch) that disables the LCD panle when the lid is closed.
Sometimes these go faulty & prevent the LCD from lighting up.
They'll typically be around the lid hinge, top edge of the base unit,
or on one of the latches.
--
W
. | ,. w , "Some people are alive only because
\|/ \|/ it is illegal to kill them." Perna condita delenda est
---^----^---------------------------------------------------------------
- Posted by Barry Watzman on May 1st, 2006
On many newer models, this is a magnetic reed switch, with a magnet in
the lid and a reed switch inside the base.
Lionel wrote:
- Posted by Dave B on May 8th, 2006
Not likely that the backlight will fit, unless both laptops have the same
screen in them.
<xaviero@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1146003062.978284.115540@y43g2000cwc.googlegr oups.com...
- Posted by James Sweet on May 9th, 2006
Dave B wrote:
I'd just buy a new CCFL tube, they're not very expensive.
- Posted by Dana on May 13th, 2006
If anyone has a lap top that has a broken screen, and they want to get rid
of it. Don't put it in the trash. I am a blind person, and could probably
still use it. All I do is load my screen read software on and I am in
business. E-mail if you have a lap top you want to get rid of. Thanks.